Staff MemberPremium Member

Devs and tinkerers will no-doubt be miffed about this news (although it's not really that surprising). Motorola explicitly indicated that it will void your warranty if you unlock the bootloader on your shiny new Moto X Pure Edition smartphone.

Basically, Moto just wants to make it clear that they do not consider the Moto X Pure to be a "Developer Edition." Here's their statement,

The new (2015) Moto X Pure is not a developer edition, so unlocking the bootloader does void the warranty. Sorry about the lack of clarity on this. We've been using this answer but I was double-checking it before posting.

-Matt, Forums Manager

Click to expand...

To be fair, Matt did elaborate by saying that any purely physical problems that are obviously defects not caused by a software malfunction would still be covered by the standard warranty and Motorola's MotoCare insurance program. Of course, that gives Moto quite a bit of wiggle-room/leeway on whether a problem can be traced to software.

This probably isn't new info for most of our DroidForums vets, but it's worth sharing for any of our newer members.

If you brick it you own it.
But with an unlocked bootloader, it's not that easy to brick a device.
Initially they claimed all warranty void.
I brought it to their attention on the forums that the U.S. Magnuson-Moss Act says differently.
So does California consumer protection law. No matter what you sign or check in a box.